The size or weight of a container or shipment
does not indicate how much radioactivity is in it.

The amount of radioactivity in a quantity of
material can be determined by noting how many curies of the material are present. This
information should be found on labels and/or shipping papers.

More curies = a greater amount of radioactivity

A large amount of material can have a very small
amount of radioactivity; a very small amount of material can have a lot of radioactivity.

For example, uranium-238 has 0.00015 curies of
radioactivity per pound (0.15 millicuries), while cobalt-60 has nearly 518,000 curies per
pound.

In the International System of units (SI), the
becquerel (Bq) is the unit of radioactivity. One Bq is 1 disintegration per second (dps).
One curie is 37 billion Bq. Since the Bq represents such a small amount, you are likely to
see a prefix used with Bq, as shown below:

1 MBq (27 microcuries)

1 GBq (27 millicuries)

37 GBq (1 curie)

1 TBq (27 curies)

SI Units and PrefixesThe International System of Units has been given official status and
recommended for universal use by the General Conference on Weights and Measures.

Radiation Measurements

Radioactivity

Absorbed Dose

Dose Equivalent

Exposure

Common Units

curie (Ci)

rad

rem

roentgen (R)

SI Units

becquerel (Bq)

gray (Gy)

sievert (Sv)

coulomb/kilogram (C/kg)

Following is a list of prefixes and their
meanings that are often used in conjunction with SI units: